Built in 1928 by internationally known theater architect Howard Crane,
the Fox Theatre Building seats over 5,000 people and is Detroit's largest
movie palace. The movie palace is surrounded by a U-shaped ten-story,
steel-frame office building that is sheathed in terra cotta. The walls
on the main floor of the theater are decorated with whimsical plaster
figures such as monkeys, serpents, lions, butterflies, and Hindu-inspired
deities. Detroit was enjoying the fruits of the automobile boom and
elaborate movie palaces, such as the Fox Theatre, were being constructed
in the then new shopping area near Circus Park. The giant 36 rank Wurlitzer
pipe organ, one of only five such instruments constructed especially
for the largest Fox theatres in the country, and the exotic and elaborate
decor helped people from all social classes in Detroit escape from the
monotony of their everyday lives. A columnist for the Detroit Free
Press wrote in the March 3, 1928 edition, "Few specimens of
architectural splendor, either ancient or modern, surpass the new Fox
Theatre. Temples to gods and palaces for kings, through long years were
the only outlets for architectural dreamings-- until the significance
of art in daily life became manifest and pervaded the buildings of intimate
use." The Fox Theatre Building was designated a National Historic
Landmark in 1989.

The Fox Theatre Building is located at 2111 Woodward Avenue just north of Grand Circus Park and east of the Women's City Club. The building is open to the public.